Attorney General Todd Rokita is alerting Hoosiers about an email and text message scam falsely claiming to be a “final notice” from the Indiana Motor Vehicle Administration (BMV), not the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles. These fraudulent messages aim to steal personal and financial information from unsuspecting individuals by threatening actions related to alleged traffic violations.
“Don’t let fraudsters steal your identity or hard-earned money,” said Attorney General Rokita. “Scammers are using sophisticated tactics to trick Hoosiers. If you receive a suspicious text claiming to be from the BMV, do not click on any links and report it to our office immediately then call your phone provider for blocking solutions.”
In previous scam messages – like June 5, 2025, scammers sent out different fraud texts from “DMV” instead of “BMV”. Scammers are using a new tactic in these deceptive messages and sending through Apple’s iMessage app rather than SMS messages. Our office has received multiple complaints and our Anti-Robocall Task Force is diligently working with three major Mobile Network Operators (MNO) to reach a solution in policing these new illegal behaviors.
The scam messages claim that, by June 26, 2025, individuals with outstanding tickets will face the following actions if payment is not completed:
They will be reported to the BMV for ticket violation.
Their vehicle registration will be suspended.
Their driving privileges will be suspended for 30 days.
They will be transferred to a toll booth and charged a 35% service fee.
They may face prosecution and will suffer potential impacts to credit scores.
Attorney General Rokita is calling on Hoosiers to remain vigilant and take the following precautions:
Do Not click on any links in unsolicited email or text messages claiming to be from the BMV.
Do Not provide personal information, such as your driver’s license number or Social Security number.
Do Not share any card or account information through text messages or unverified links.
Report the unwanted text messages as junk on the app you use and block the phone number or email address.
Contact your phone provider for call/text blocking solutions. Many manufacturers have built-in features to block unwanted calls or offer apps to block and label potential spam calls. Click here for a list of resources available.
If you have already provided personal information or money through a link in these email or text messages, file a consumer complaint immediately online at indianaconsumer.com or call 317-232-6330.
Photo by zhu yi: https://www.pexels.com/photo/rows-of-tables-and-chairs-in-the-classroom-6602623/.
In 2020, Rochelle Muhammad, a Merrillville mother who worked the night shift to provide for her teenage son, received some unexpected mail. It was a summons to appear in court after her son was late to school too many times.
“I felt attacked,” she said. “I thought I was a good mother.”
She was shocked to see that she could go to jail for something her child wasn’t doing correctly, like going to the bus on time.
Muhammad wasn’t the only parent battling attendance issues during this time.
Graphic by DeMarion Newell, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Before the pandemic, some school districts, such as Gary Community School Corporation, had attendance rates as low as 25%. During the pandemic, schools had no choice but to switch to kids attending school virtually, and Gary absentee rates spiked to as high as 71%. Since then, Gary and the state’s chronically absent percentage have improved.
In 2024, the Indiana Department of Education released the state’s chronic absenteeism rating, and for the second consecutive year, Indiana’s rating improved.
In Indiana, 17.8% of students were chronically absent for the 2023-2024 school year. That’s 1.4 percentage points better than the 2022-2023 school year and 3.3 percentage points better than the post-pandemic rate.
As absenteeism rates gradually improve in Indiana, state lawmakers have continued to pass bills to address the issue.
For example, Rep. Vernon Smith, D-Gary, proposed House Bill 1540 during the 2025 legislative session, requiring the Department of Education to look at coming up with suggestions to improve the system, creating disciplinary actions to cut down the days kids miss school, setting up guidelines for schools to step in earlier, and making an attendance plan.
Rep. Vernon Smith, D-Gary.
Photo provided.
The bill died in committee, but it meant something to him because he was a principal before becoming a legislator. During Smith’s last principal job, at Williams Elementary School in Gary, he tried to encourage students to come to school by making it a fun environment.
“We never lost our focus on academic achievement, but we did things to make children enjoy school. We had pride days, we had incentives,” he said. “For example, if you had perfect attendance for the month, then the following month, you can come to our game room during lunch. We also had things like, if your class had the best attendance, then we were going to have your choice of a pizza party or ice cream party per grade level.”
He also highlighted that his second priority was to help parents become partners in their efforts to improve attendance, and his staff would strategize with parents to see what they could do to help.
“For example, laying out the children’s clothing the night before, if the children were having difficulty getting up in the morning. Let them take their showers and their baths at nighttime. So, when they get up, all they have to do is get out of bed, brush their teeth, comb their hair, wash their faces and leave the house,” Smith said.
“We wanted them to come partners with us to understand that academic time had to be protected. Students shouldn’t be coming into school an hour late, half-hour late or missing half the day.”
Smith observed some improvements when focusing on attendance but still encountered challenges.
Now, in Smith’s role as a lawmaker, he along with other representatives and senators can make bills with the hope of improving the issue, but none of this is possible without the efforts from the school districts and teachers.
Graphic by DeMarion Newell, TheStatehouseFile.com.
During the pandemic, two school districts, GCSC and Warren Township, saw spikes in their chronic absenteeism ratings. GCSC rates reached a high of 71% in 2022, and Warren Township rates peaked at 63.6%. These districts are now making it a priority to reduce these rates moving forward.
Chris Membribes, assistant principal at Warren High School, is in his second year there and has developed a multi-tiered support system to tackle the chronic absenteeism that he believes is working.
“Because we’re treating people like people,” Membribes said.
“Before I got here, communication was done via email, via code, pre-scripted letters. While we still send those out, I recognize that there needed to be more. Treat people like people. People who don’t have reliable housing probably don’t have reliable internet. People who are thinking about what their next meal or how they’re going to provide for their family’s next meal are thinking about what message or voicemail did I receive from the school today—recognizing that I think was the first step to changing the chronic absentee issue that we had.”
Membribes was aware that, at one point, the school’s ratings were over 35%, and he said, “I just, I can’t imagine that that’s sustainable for me.
“So I made it my mission to address that. … It’s like a personal achievement that I am striving for to bring that number down to about 10% in the next two years.”
Warren’s multi-tiered support system aims to identify the problem and then address it by offering different services for support.
“So, let’s say they’re like, we recently lost our jobs, and you know, I’m working two jobs, and sometimes I’m home to get them to school, sometimes I’m not well. Then we refer that person or that family to our McKinney-Vento specialist to see if they can qualify for any services,” Membribes said. “If they don’t qualify for any of those services, then they’re transferred over to what is known as True Lasting Connections in the city of Downey,” he said.
“So, we take that first approach, and then the second approach is centered on clear and consistent communication, reminding families the importance of school, reminding them through letters and messages, … personal phone calls, and making sure that if that chronic absentee continues, there are specific consequences that we have in place to ensure that their student is on track for graduation and on track to graduate. … So we offer Saturday school attendance recovery, where students can complete assignments, work on homework, and make sure that they are receiving their full educational benefit despite the fact that they’ve missed several days of school.
Membribes added: “We’re not quite there yet. I think we’re definitely moving in the right direction. Change is the process, and change takes time.”
Antionette Ferguson-Dixon, the director of student services of GCSC. She has been a student, dean, assistant and interim principal in this same system and has the goal to leave a mark in the system where she was educated and in her hometown.
“We’re on the up-cline this year in Gary,” Ferguson-Dixon said about the recent GCSC attendance rate improvements. She said they have a goal of reaching 95% attendance ratings.
“Gary is holding those mid-80s, which for Gary is an increase,” she said. “We like our secondary schools to become higher, specifically our high school. We need higher attendance.”
Graphic by DeMarion Newell, TheStatehouseFile.com.
In her role, she gets a chance to view the state post percentages of each school district every week. Because she was new to the position, she went back to the 2021-2022 school year just to look at the spikes in the ratings.
“Like how chronic absenteeism is increasing and decreasing, what breaks or holidays or what periods of the year our attendance is higher,” she said. “I’m trying to look and find trends within the data that could influence how we, for example, plan activity or how we even target instruction academics.”
Ferguson-Dixon emphasized that adding an attendance department has been the key factor in improvement.
“A part of that, I want to believe, and I do believe, is because we’ve added a department that is focused on attendance as one of its main focuses,” she said.
Sen. Stacey Donato, R-Logansport, had a bill on chronic absenteeism signed into law May 6, and she gave TheStatehouseFile.com some insight into why some schools are doing better than others.
“Some schools are doing a great job; they have the resources to do that,” she said. “[But many] schools just don’t have the resources to do it. So, we’re just trying to get some better practices.”
Donato complimented Warren’s program by what she would call “rocking it.” But she spoke about small schools without a lot of students that do not have the resources to make programs to tackle absenteeism.
Sen. Stacey Donato, R-Logansport.
Photo provided.
“I have a school in my district where the entire building is 400 students, K-12, so they’re not going to be able to have staff to combat that,” she said.
Schools are transitioning from punishing parents to now trying to fix the root problem of why the absences are occurring.
Muhammad’s attendance at court stemmed from her son consistently being tardy. This led to her having to attend court for trial and complete 30 hours of community service, and her son had to participate in a Big Brother mentorship program for three months.
When Muhammad went to court over her son being chronically absent, all that she had to endure didn’t help their situation personally, she said.
“It was other people in the courtroom who were chronically absent; it was whole families who weren’t going to school, and the parents were threatened with the same consequences,” she explained. “I’m like, I know my son is late, which is not good, but these young children haven’t been.”
Her son was a junior in high school at the time and was paired with a student in college. He said the mentorship didn’t help him attend school on time, but it did help him with other things, like writing his first cover letter and applications to college. By his senior year, his attendance improved.
DeMarion Newell was a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students, before his spring 2025 graduation from the Franklin College Pulliam School of Journalism. He completed this report as part of his senior project.
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Indiana Supreme Court Justices question defendants in a case between the Indiana Attorney General’s Office and the owners of TikTok. (Screenshot from oral arguments)
Indiana’s highest court weighed allegations of TikTok’s alleged deceptive practices in the Hoosier State on Tuesday, skeptical of arguments from both sides about jurisdictional issues.
The two suits, heard together, were filed by Attorney General Todd Rokita against the popular, short-form video app in December 2022 in Fort Wayne. He accused TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, of violating Indiana’s Deceptive Consumer Sales Act with its age rating for those 12 and older — claiming that it contained more sexual content, profanity and drug references than advertised.
The above made TikTok unsafe for children, he continued. Additionally, he claimed in a separate lawsuit that the company failed to protect user data from the Chinese Communist Party.
“Congress doesn’t agree on much, but they agreed on this. And the (U.S.) Supreme Court said it’s okay to (ban) in this context,” said Justice Christoper Goff. “But now, we’re on pause … this seems to be a completely unique circumstance. And I cannot, for the life of me, imagine, with all of that going on, why it would be appropriate for us, or reasonable for us, to cite the precedent to exercise jurisdiction here and write a rule for all time.”
Conservative and liberal lawmakers both cite worries about TikTok’s parent company, Beijing-based ByteDance, and its ties to the Chinese Communist Party. Some have openly wondered if the app feeds user data to Chinese authorities, including Rokita.
“Our lawsuit against TikTok was filed to protect our children and to protect our data privacy that we allege is being stolen by the Chinese Communist Party. We maintain their business model intentionally deceives children and adults to drive up profits by saying it is appropriate for kids and that your personal data is safe. Neither is true,” the office said in a statement in 2023.
The lower courts dismissed Rokita’s suits and the agency appealed the case to the Indiana Supreme Court. State attorneys on Tuesday countered that the “federal law over the divestiture of ownership of TikTok has nothing to do with this case,” maintaining that the issue at hand was “deceptive and misleading representations made to consumers.”
Arguments before the court
Attorney Brian Paul, representing TikTok and ByteDance, argued that the Indiana Supreme Court wasn’t the appropriate venue for the case, which is the first issue before the justices.
“Indiana is seeking to punish TikTok for statements that were not made in Indiana, that are not about Indiana, that were not targeted at Indiana and were not tailored to Indiana,” Paul said in his opening remarks.
The state previously argued that justices could intervene because Hoosiers enter into user contracts with TikTok when they download the app.
Paul said because TikTok has no physical presence in the state, not even a server, Indiana wasn’t appropriate for the lawsuit — though the company makes $46 million off of Hoosier data annually by using collected data to tailor advertiser content, plaintiffs said.
Justices seemed to doubt that reasoning, pointing to other products, like magazines shipped across state boundaries, and legal precedent.
“TikTok seeks to escape the rules that apply to everyone else, from print magazines to burger franchises,” said Solicitor General James Barta, arguing on behalf of the state.
Barta said that these “daily exchange(s) of data” are used by the plaintiffs to craft “addictive content” based on user locations to earn millions.
“And yet, TikTok says Indiana courts can do nothing to hold it accountable for misleading and deceptive statements that induced Indiana parents to download this app for themselves or for their children, and that ultimately end up harming children and other users,” Barta concluded.
Chief Justice Loretta Rush wondered if such a broad application of Indiana law might capture other apps and social media companies anytime a Hoosiers accepts a website’s cookies or agrees to a user contract.
“Every one of those is going to be subject to (our jurisdiction) no matter where they’re located or the product?” Rush asked. “… are we going to now have personal jurisdiction of any company that grabs and sells data in Indiana, no matter how small?”
That concern appeared to resonate with some of Rush’s fellow justices.
“The implications for things like free speech, for interstate commerce seemed, to me, to be just breathtaking,” said Goff.
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In response, Barta said the core of the case was about deception and misleading consumers and that the state “has a significant interest in protecting its consumers, in having its courts interpret its laws.”
Justice Derek Molter noted, however, that it was “unusual” to claim a violation of Indiana’s Deceptive Consumer Sales Act without the exchange of money.
“… it is core to TikTok’s business model to be able to monetize users’ time and attention and this is, of course, not the only company that does this,” Barta said. “… it would be awfully odd to say that the legislature has been completely unaware of this, and yet has decided to do nothing about it with the Deceptive Consumer Sales Act.”
He said the law doesn’t cover “free” transactions, but does apply to an exchange of goods and services. He contends that Tiktok users exchange their data for entertainment. The state is seeking civil penalties and a jury trial as allowed under that law.
Justices, led by Rush, indicated they would issue their ruling “in due course.”
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer has released its schedule for the 2025 championship season.
The 2025 season officially kicks off Thursday, August 14, when the Screaming Eagles travel to face their first power-conference opponent in regular-season action at the University of Nebraska of the Big Ten Conference.
The road matchup at Nebraska will also be USI’s first official contest as a full-fledged NCAA Division I program after completing the reclassification process the previous three years, making the 2025 campaign the first season in which the Screaming Eagles are eligible for the NCAA postseason.
Southern Indiana will tune up for the regular season with a pair of preseason exhibitions in early August. On August 3, USI will meet the University of Nebraska Omaha in St. Louis, Missouri, and on August 9, the Eagles will host Illinois State University from Strassweg Field.
After the season-opening match at Nebraska, USI kicks off its home schedule on August 17 against Cleveland State University. The Screaming Eagles will also host Eastern Michigan University (August 28), Southern Illinois University (August 31), Valparaiso University (September 4), and Purdue University Fort Wayne (September 14) during the non-conference season.
Other non-conference road stops include a back-to-back trip to Robert Morris University (August 21) and the University of Akron (August 24), and a visit to Bellarmine University on September 7.
Southern Indiana’s fourth season in the Ohio Valley Conference opens September 20 at the University of Tennessee at Martin. The nine-match conference schedule includes consecutive home dates at Strassweg Field against Morehead State University on September 25, which is a rematch of last season’s OVC tournament quarterfinal for USI, and against Southeast Missouri State University on September 28. Then the Screaming Eagles will hit the road for back-to-back contests at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (October 5) and Eastern Illinois University (October 9). USI returns home October 12 for a tilt against Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. Southern Indiana will travel to face Tennessee Tech University, the 2024 OVC regular-season champions, on October 16 before hosting Lindenwood University, the reigning OVC tournament champions, on October 19 in the home finale. USI concludes the regular season with a trip to Western Illinois University (October 26).
The OVC Championship Tournament runs from October 30 through November 9.
“We are extremely excited to announce our 2025 schedule,” USI Women’s Soccer Head Coach Eric Schoenstein said. “We face our toughest schedule in program history, starting with a power-four team at Nebraska, and the following matches are just as challenging. We scheduled a difficult non-conference season to prepare us for a tough Ohio Valley Conference schedule. Our experienced and talented roster is looking forward to the upcoming season.”
The Screaming Eagles went 5-9-5 overall last season and 4-2-3 in conference play. USI is coming off its second consecutive appearance in the OVC tournament quarterfinals last year.
Jenn Horn has been named Director for the Honors Program and Themed Learning Communities (TLCs), effective immediately.
Horn has served as Interim Director for the Honors Program and Themed Learning Communities since May 2024. She began working at USI in Fall 2012 as an Instructor in English and Liberal Arts where she has taught classes in folklore, composition, mythology, humanities and gender studies. In these courses, she has regularly worked with Honors students on their projects and supported their journey to an Honors degree. She has also served as a faculty mentor with the TLC Program since 2017 and worked with several TLCs including the College of Liberal Arts TLC, the Screagles TLC, and the Service and Leadership TLC.
The Honors Program is for USI students who want to challenge themselves academically and are prepared to invest extra time and effort to meet that challenge through more rigorous coursework. The Program also creates a community of like-minded students invested in challenging themselves and supporting each other during their educational journey.
TLCs at USI allow students aligned by various interests to create strong communities and life-long friends through their shared living experiences and interests. Students in TLCs typically earn a higher GPA, are more likely to persist at USI and graduate at higher rates than other first-year students.
Horn has a master’s degree in folklore from Indiana University Bloomington, a master’s degree in English from the University of Indianapolis and is currently in the proposal and writing stages of her EdD dissertation here at USI where her concentration is higher education administrative leadership.
INDIANAPOLIS – The 2024Indiana Youth Tobacco Survey (IYTS) released today shows that youth tobacco use continues to decline, with high school tobacco use at its lowest level in two decades.
E-cigarette use among high school youth has dropped to 5% − its lowest level since data collection began in 2012, down from a peak of 18.5% in 2018 − while cigarette smoking has reached a record low since data collection began in 2000, falling from 31.6%. Despite this progress, concerns remain as flavored tobacco products, frequent e-cigarette use, and the rising popularity of oral nicotine pouches indicate ongoing risks for nicotine addiction. Additionally, many Indiana youth who have never used tobacco products are still susceptible to future use, reinforcing the importance of continued prevention efforts.
“We are encouraged by the continued decline in youth tobacco and e-cigarette use, yet we remain vigilant in addressing nicotine addiction and the appeal of flavored products,” said State Health Commissioner Lindsay Weaver, M.D., FACEP. “I am thankful for the tobacco prevention team and many coalitions who have been addressing tobacco prevention for decades. This last year they have had the added assistance of addressing vaping prevention in schools with the local health departments’ school health liaisons, made possible by Health First Indiana.”
The biennial survey collects data from Indiana public school students in grades 6 through 12 on tobacco use, secondhand smoke exposure, access to tobacco products, advertising, and cessation efforts. The IYTS provides the most comprehensive statewide, representative source of tobacco-related behavior data among public middle and high school students in Indiana.
E-cigarettes remain the most commonly used tobacco product among youth, with approximately 15,000 high school students and 5,000 middle school students currently using e-cigarettes. Nearly half (46%) of high school students who use e-cigarettes reported frequent use (20 or more days in the past 30 days), signaling a dependence on nicotine.
Even among youth who have never used tobacco products, susceptibility to begin use remains a concern. The survey found that approximately 1 in 4 youth who have never smoked cigarettes, 1 in 5 who have never used e-cigarettes, and 1 in 7 who have never tried nicotine pouches are susceptible to future use.
Flavored tobacco products continue to be a significant concern, as they increase appeal and initiation among youth. Among youth who use tobacco, the majority reported using flavored tobacco products, including menthol.
The IYTS found that many youth who use tobacco want to quit, with 70.3% of middle school students and 50.5% of high school students making at least one quit attempt in the past year. However, the majority of students who attempted to quit tried to do so “cold turkey,” without support resources, highlighting the need for more cessation assistance.
“Comprehensive tobacco control programs remain essential to reducing youth tobacco use,” said Miranda Spitznagle, director of Tobacco Prevention and Cessation at the Indiana Department of Health. “By working together — parents, schools, healthcare providers, and community organizations — we can continue protecting young Hoosiers from the harms of commercial tobacco products.”
Indiana offers free tobacco cessation resources for youth. Young Hoosiers interested in quitting can enroll in Live Vape Free’s program by visitinglivevapefree.com. Quit Now Indiana is another free resource available to any Hoosier, aged 13 and older, by calling 1-800-QUIT-NOW or by texting READY to 34191. Quitlines provide essential support for quitting tobacco and vaping, making long-term success five to eight times more likely than attempting to quit alone.
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
SAUGET, Ill. – The Evansville Otters (18-21) used a seven-run sixth inning to defeat the Gateway Grizzlies (22-17) in game one of the series, 12-8.
The bats for Evansville got started early with a David Mendham single followed later by a Pavin Parks double that put the Otters up 1-0.
Parker Brahms made his seventh start of the year and threw a gem. He pitched through some traffic early, stranding four runners and striking out three through the first two innings.
Evansville used a sacrifice fly from Keenan Taylor and a two-out ground rule double to plate two in the second. After Gateway responded with one in the bottom of the second, Evansville led 3-1.
Back-to-back doubles from Taylor and JJ Cruz added one in the fourth, and another sacrifice fly from Taylor added another in the fifth, leading to a 5-1 Otters lead. Brahms settled in, only facing 10 batters from the third through fifth inning.
Evansville exploded in the sixth, using two hit batters, singles from JT Benson, Parks and a double from Logan Brown to score four runs. Cruz capped off the inning with a three-run home run to right to plate seven in the sixth, pushing the Evansville lead to 12-1.
Brahms worked the sixth, allowing only one more run, to finish with his second straight quality start with five strikeouts and no walks issued. Nolan Thebiay then worked a scoreless seventh out of the Otters’ bullpen.
Gateway managed to score three runs in the eighth and three in the ninth, but the Otters ultimately closed the game out, 12-8.
Evansville finished with 16 hits, including three hit games from LJ Jones, Parks, and Cruz. Six of the Otters’ starting nine finished with RBI in the contest.
The Otters are back in action tomorrow night at 6:05 p.m. CT before the series finale against Gateway at 10:45 a.m. CT on Thursday morning. Evansville then returns home Friday to host division rivals Florence.